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Oman’s foreign minister met Thursday in Geneva with President Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner, as efforts intensify to reach a new agreement over Iran’s nuclear program.

The minister, Sayyid Badr bin Hamad Al Busaidi, said the talks focused on Tehran’s proposals and perspectives, as well as questions and responses from the U.S. negotiating team regarding key aspects of Iran’s nuclear program and the guarantees required for a potential agreement.

‘His Excellency the Minister of Foreign Affairs clarified that the efforts are continuing intensively and in a constructive spirit, under the negotiators’ unprecedented openness to new and creative ideas and solutions, while preparing the supportive conditions for progress and reaching a fair agreement with sustainable guarantees,’ the ministry said in a post on X.

The closely watched meeting comes amid heightened regional tensions and a visible U.S. military buildup in the Middle East, including the repositioning of naval assets and additional air defense capabilities.

The USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier and multiple guided-missile destroyers are operating in the Arabian Sea, as well as additional destroyers stationed in the Mediterranean and Red Seas.

Several combat ships are also positioned in the Persian Gulf near Iran’s southern coastline.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters on Wednesday that while Trump prefers a diplomatic solution, Washington views Iran as a ‘grave threat’ and remains deeply concerned about both its nuclear ambitions and expanding missile arsenal.

He said the talks in Geneva would be ‘largely focused on the nuclear program’ but warned that Tehran’s refusal to discuss its ballistic missiles poses a major obstacle.

‘Iran possesses a very large number of ballistic missiles, particularly short-range ballistic missiles that threaten the United States and our bases in the region and our partners in the region, and all of our bases in the UAE, in Qatar, in Bahrain,’ he explained. ‘I want everybody to understand that, and beyond just the nuclear program, they possess these conventional weapons that are solely designed to attack America and attack Americans, if they so choose to do so. These things have to be addressed.’

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Trump says Iran has 15 days to reach a deal or face ‘unfortunate’ outcome
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A Senate Democrat is demanding that the Trump administration refund billions in tariff revenue to Americans following last week’s Supreme Court decision, according to a letter first obtained by Fox News Digital.

Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., wrote in a letter to President Donald Trump charging that he was concerned over the White House’s ‘lack of action’ to issue refunds to families and small businesses impacted by tariffs.

His appeal to the president comes after the Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 decision last week that Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), the law undergirding his sweeping duties, ‘does not authorize the President to impose tariffs.’

‘The invalidation of these IEEPA tariffs is a chance to make American families and small businesses whole — not to retain unlawfully collected funds or enable additional corporate profit,’ Gallego wrote.

Gallego’s letter comes as Congress wrestles with its next move on tariffs and as Trump has vowed to sidestep lawmakers in his quest to continue levying duties on other countries.

Some Republicans want to see Trump’s tariffs considered through budget reconciliation — the same party-line move used to pass his ‘big, beautiful bill’ last year — to meet the deliberative parameters established in the court’s decision.

Others think Trump doesn’t need to come to Congress. The president already moved to reinstate 10% tariffs that are set to last for 150 days and will require lawmakers to weigh in on continuing them.

Several congressional Democrats want to see the administration tender full refunds from the billions raked in under Trump’s tariffs — 25 Senate Democrats back a newly introduced bill led by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., to refund all duties with interest.

And Gallego specifically wants guardrails to ensure that money ends up in the hands of families and small businesses.

‘Absent action from this administration, over $100 billion in tariff revenue collected under those unlawful tariffs will not make it into the hands of American families and small businesses but instead will remain either in government coffers or in corporate accounts,’ Gallego wrote.

Since the start of the current fiscal year in October, Trump’s IEEPA tariffs are estimated to have generated roughly $155 billion, according to data from the Treasury Department.

He also raised concerns about large corporations taking advantage of the ‘chaotic and expansive nature of the IEEPA tariffs’ to crank up prices on products in response to the duties.

Gallego included several requests of the administration in his letter to be met no later than March 4, including whether the administration will issue tariff refunds, who will be eligible, how much revenue has been collected as of Feb. 20 and whether corporations will be required to disclose tariff costs passed on to consumers, among several others.

He also warned that corporations, armed with the financial firepower to hire ‘high-priced lawyers and lobbyists,’ would have a leg up on Americans without the same means.

‘Without your administration providing a structured process to determine how refunds should be distributed, American families and small businesses will once again be left behind,’ Gallego wrote.

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LSU Tigers guard Flau’jae Johnson has a two-word motto ahead of an NCAA Tournament run with LSU.

‘Choose better,’ Johnson told USA TODAY while promoting a partnership with BODYARMOR. ‘That’s literally who I am in every facet of my life.’

Fittingly, the sports drink brand has a March Madness campaign, focused on hydration and recovery, with the same name. However, for Johnson, it’s more than a campaign. It’s how she operates.

‘Choose better in every facet of my life: my mental, my preparation, my body. What I put into my body is very important to me. It’s just choosing better in everything that I do, especially as an athlete,’ Johnson said.

‘I feel like taking care of your body is the No. 1 thing you have to do. For me, it’s in every facet of life. When I’m into something or when I’m doing anything ― and that’s my athletics [and] my music ― I’m trying to choose better. I’m trying to be the best version of myself.’

Johnson, in her senior season with LSU, says she’s focused on staying grounded ahead of her fourth NCAA Tournament appearance. The Savannah, Georgia, native told USA TODAY she’s made a conscientious effort to make recovery the center of how she stays calm through the season. Johnson says if she doesn’t recover her mind, her body inevitably ‘won’t go as hard’ as she needs.

She’s been particularly cognizant of that as LSU makes a push for another title, its first since the 2022-2023 season. Johnson, who was on that national championship roster, understands what it takes to win at the highest level. Those lessons have come in handy when this year’s roster struggled around the halfway point of the season.

‘Who do you wanna be? What kind of team do you wanna be? What kind of player do you want to be?’ Johnson said. ‘As we just decided that and we came to a consensus, I think we just learned who we wanted to be and our identity … that being a team and seeing each other win and making that extra pass and rebounding the ball, that’s who we are. We just gotta understand that and get back to that.’

Following the losses to Kentucky and Vanderbilt, LSU won 10 of its next 12 matchups, including seven straight games. The streak boasted ranked wins over Texas, Oklahoma, Alabama and Ole Miss. LSU’s 78-70 win over the Rebels was especially gritty as the Tigers were down by as much as 13 before roaring back in the fourth quarter. LSU held Ole Miss to seven points in the fourth.

That sort of tenacity and focus is what LSU needs as it finishes the season. The Tigers will see many of the teams they just beat in the SEC Tournament, which begins March 4.

Johnson says what gets lost in the grind of March Madness is teams are playing games just about every day and traveling ‘across the world,’ depending on the region. She also says all the good vibes LSU has built up now won’t really matter.

‘You gotta flush it. If you have a 30-point game and you have a game-winner, it don’t matter the next game. If your head’s not on a swivel, you’re out,’ Johnson said. ‘That’s definitely the most important part of the NCAA Tournament. That’s why you have to be [level.] Can’t get too high. Can’t get too low ― until you get that ring.’

LSU has two regular season games remaining, against Tennessee on Thursday and Mississippi State on Sunday. The Tigers need to dial in for a deep March Madness run now.

Johnson told USA TODAY to get back to the Final Four and walk away with a title, LSU needs will need to do two things.

‘Defense and rebounding. That’s all we gotta do,’ Johnson said, smiling. ‘We play defense, and we rebound, the offense will take care of itself. We’ll get what we want, but if we defend and rebound, we’ll be in a good space. I’ll tell you that.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Connor Hellebuyck, the primary reason Team USA broke its 46-year Olympic men’s hockey gold medal drought, forever dispelled his previous tag of not being a big-game goaltender. 

Let’s dive into Hellebuyck’s five best performances, three of which came from his first trip to the NHL playoffs. Nobody will be surprised to see which is cemented in the No. 1 spot. 

And I doubt he’ll ever top the performance we witnessed to culminate the 2026 Milano Cortina Games.

Connor Hellebuyck’s top 5 performances

5. 2017-18 playoffs (Game 4, first round) 

Hellebuyck has five shutouts in 58 playoff games, two of which occurred in consecutive games in the first round of the 2017-18 postseason against the Minnesota Wild. 

Hellebuyck made the identical number of saves in Games 4 and 5, with 30 each. Due to playing on the road with the series still hanging in the balance (2-1 Jets), his Game 4 performance was marginally better.

The Jets won 2-0, leading to their Game 5 series clincher at home.  

4. 2017-18 playoffs (Game 1, second round)

Playing in Nashville, one of the most inhospitable playoff environments, the Jets faced a daunting task against No. 1 seed Nashville in Game 1. 

Hellebuyck made the 4-1 upset appear effortless despite the relentless barrage of attacks he was up against. He made 47 saves on 48 shots, finishing with a .979 save percentage. 

Kevin Fiala broke Hellebuyck’s shutout bid early in the third period, but the Jets’ netminder was named the first star of the game. 

3. 2020-21 playoffs (Game 2, first round)

The Jets stormed into Edmonton in the second straight COVID-impacted playoffs and prevailed 1-0 over the Oilers in overtime, thanks to Hellebuyck’s heroics. 

He made 38 saves against Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl, and Co., providing Winnipeg with a commanding 2-0 series lead heading back to Winnipeg for Game 3. 

What made the goose egg even more impressive is the fact the Oilers haven’t been shut out in the playoffs at home since that fateful night at Rogers Place. 

2. 2017-18 playoffs (Game 7, second round)

Easily his best Game 7 performance, Hellebuyck marched into Nashville and silenced the raucous home crowd. 

He made 36 saves on 37 shots for a .973 save percentage, propelling the Jets to a 5-1 victory and securing their place in the Western Conference final against the Vegas Golden Knights. 

Hellebuyck won three of four in Nashville during his most successful playoff series. 

1. 2026 Olympic gold medal game 

With the weight of a nation and a 46-year wait tossed on his shoulders, Hellebuyck stood taller than the world’s tallest building, assembling arguably the greatest goaltending performance in any competition, ever.

He faced 42 shots, many of which were of the high-danger variety, and turned aside 41. He made several monumental saves, including on Canada’s 5-on-3 second-period power play, and stopped McDavid and Macklin Celebrini on breakaways. 

That merely scratches the surface of his fairytale-like performance on the world’s biggest stage.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A Senate Democrat is demanding that the Trump administration refund billions in tariff revenue to Americans following last week’s Supreme Court decision, according to a letter first obtained by Fox News Digital.

Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., wrote in a letter to President Donald Trump charging that he was concerned over the White House’s ‘lack of action’ to issue refunds to families and small businesses impacted by tariffs.

His appeal to the president comes after the Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 decision last week that Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), the law undergirding his sweeping duties, ‘does not authorize the President to impose tariffs.’

‘The invalidation of these IEEPA tariffs is a chance to make American families and small businesses whole — not to retain unlawfully collected funds or enable additional corporate profit,’ Gallego wrote.

Gallego’s letter comes as Congress wrestles with its next move on tariffs and as Trump has vowed to sidestep lawmakers in his quest to continue levying duties on other countries.

Some Republicans want to see Trump’s tariffs considered through budget reconciliation — the same party-line move used to pass his ‘big, beautiful bill’ last year — to meet the deliberative parameters established in the court’s decision.

Others think Trump doesn’t need to come to Congress. The president already moved to reinstate 10% tariffs that are set to last for 150 days and will require lawmakers to weigh in on continuing them.

Several congressional Democrats want to see the administration tender full refunds from the billions raked in under Trump’s tariffs — 25 Senate Democrats back a newly introduced bill led by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., to refund all duties with interest.

And Gallego specifically wants guardrails to ensure that money ends up in the hands of families and small businesses.

‘Absent action from this administration, over $100 billion in tariff revenue collected under those unlawful tariffs will not make it into the hands of American families and small businesses but instead will remain either in government coffers or in corporate accounts,’ Gallego wrote.

Since the start of the current fiscal year in October, Trump’s IEEPA tariffs are estimated to have generated roughly $155 billion, according to data from the Treasury Department.

He also raised concerns about large corporations taking advantage of the ‘chaotic and expansive nature of the IEEPA tariffs’ to crank up prices on products in response to the duties.

Gallego included several requests of the administration in his letter to be met no later than March 4, including whether the administration will issue tariff refunds, who will be eligible, how much revenue has been collected as of Feb. 20 and whether corporations will be required to disclose tariff costs passed on to consumers, among several others.

He also warned that corporations, armed with the financial firepower to hire ‘high-priced lawyers and lobbyists,’ would have a leg up on Americans without the same means.

‘Without your administration providing a structured process to determine how refunds should be distributed, American families and small businesses will once again be left behind,’ Gallego wrote.

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Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is set to be deposed by the House Oversight Committee late Thursday morning, as lawmakers continue to investigate the federal government’s handling of Jeffrey Epstein’s case.

The deposition is expected to begin at 11 a.m. ET in Chappaqua, N.Y., Fox News Digital was told. The Clintons have owned a home in the affluent New York City suburb since 1999 and have primarily lived there since former President Bill Clinton left office.

And while closed-door depositions normally just require a committee staff presence in most cases, a source familiar with planning told Fox News Digital that House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., will be there in person.

At least 10 House Republicans on the committee will also attend, the source said.

Hillary Clinton will be deposed on Thursday, while Bill Clinton’s deposition is scheduled for Friday. Both interviews will be closed to the press, but they will be transcribed and videotaped.

Comer told Fox News Digital on Wednesday that the former first couple’s testimony ‘is critical to understanding Epstein and [Ghislaine Maxwell’s] sex trafficking network and the ways they sought to curry favor and influence to shield themselves from scrutiny.’

‘Their testimony may also inform how Congress can strengthen laws to better combat human trafficking. Our goal for this investigation is straightforward: We seek to deliver transparency and accountability for the American people and survivors,’ Comer said.

The Clintons’ testimony comes after months of back-and-forth with the committee on the circumstances and conditions of the interviews.

They are two of several people and entities whom Comer subpoenaed for information on Epstein back in August.

Their attorneys initially pushed back on the subpoenas, calling them legally invalid and a violation of the separation of powers, but House Republicans responded by pressing forward with resolutions to hold both Clintons in contempt of Congress.

The lawyers finally agreed to Comer’s terms just days before a full House vote was expected to move forward.

But not all members of the committee are satisfied with how the situation is playing out.

‘I don’t know why the heck we didn’t bring them here. If you or I got in trouble, guess what? We’d be here, or we’d be in chains, and they’d be dragging us in. Having them up in Chappaqua to me is an insult to the public,’ Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., told reporters on Wednesday. ‘I realize they got to cut a deal, but it’s not a deal I would have cut.’

Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif., the top Democrat on the committee, told reporters, ‘We have a good group going up to New York.’

‘I think that anyone that has information about Jeffrey Epstein or spent any time with him, I think it’s important to ask questions. I mean, personally, I think one of the things that we’ve been hearing a lot about lately is whether Jeffrey Epstein had any sort of foreign ties, whether there were any sort of…wealth of foreign governments,’ Garcia said.

But both sides have largely accused the other of politicizing the probe. Democrats have accused Republicans of trying to create a narrative that persecutes figures on the left while attempting to clear President Donald Trump, and Republicans are arguing that Democrats are using the investigation to purposefully target the sitting commander-in-chief.

Neither Clinton has been accused of any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein, nor has Trump.

But both Trump and Clinton have appeared numerous times in the Epstein files released so far and are known to have had relationships with the late pedophile before his federal investigations.

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Republican and Independent voters reacted favorably when President Donald Trump brought up how his administration has cracked down on drug cartels and fentanyl, but Democrats appeared less motivated by Trump’s aggressive foreign policy stance. 

‘For years, large swaths of territory in our region, including large parts of Mexico, really large parts of Mexico, have been controlled by murderous drug cartels. That’s why I designated these cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, and I declared illicit fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction,’ Trump said to applause as he turned to look at Republicans. 

Per a panel assembled by polling group Maslansky & Partners of 29 Democrats, 30 Independents, and 40 Republicans, which tracked their real-time reactions during Trump’s SOTU address, Democrats appeared to go slightly below baseline when Trump began touting his aggressive stance towards cartels in Central and South America, specifically his administration’s bombing campaign against them which has included attacks in the open ocean off the South American coastline and in the eastern Pacific.

Meanwhile, Republicans and Independents showed a much stronger favorable reaction to the president’s remarks about the actions his administration has taken against drug cartels and illegal fentanyl. 

During his address, Trump also highlighted the U.S.’s help in capturing drug kingpin ‘El Mencho’ earlier this month in Mexico. Ruben ‘Nemesio’ Oseguera Cervantes, known as ‘El Mencho,’ the leader of the CJNG, was killed Sunday in a Mexican military operation in Tapalpa, Mexico, authorities said. Though the operation was carried out by Mexican forces, the United States laid the groundwork, making El Mencho’s fall possible.

On President Donald Trump’s first day in office, he signed an executive order directing the State Department to designate several cartels and international criminal groups ‘foreign terrorist organizations’ (FTOs), a designation unlocking military-grade surveillance and ‘material support’ prosecutions. Though lesser known than MS-13 or Tren de Aragua, CJNG was one of the groups designated an FTO by the administration.

Shortly after Trump’s executive order, Attorney General Pam Bondi sent a policy memorandum to all Department of Justice employees, announcing a ‘fundamental change in mindset and approach’ to cartels and transnational criminal organizations to a policy of ‘total elimination.’

The Trump administration has engaged in an aggressive bombing campaign against cartel boats throughout both 2025 and 2026. The U.S. has also conducted non-lethal maritime drug interdiction efforts as well.

In early 2026, Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro was captured by U.S. forces and extradited to New York on drug trafficking and narco-terrorism charges, with Trump accusing him at the time of being a ‘kingpin of a vast criminal network.’

The recent violence and capture of El Mencho this month has led American tourists to be trapped in Mexico. According to White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, the State Department has been taking ‘hundreds of calls a day’ providing Americans with travel support and advice.

‘We are unaware of any reports of any Americans being hurt, kidnapped, or killed, and the Mexican drug cartels know not to lay a finger on a single American or they will pay severe consequences under this president – and they already are,’ Leavitt told Fox News. 

Fox News Digital’s Peter Pinedo contributed to this report.

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President Donald Trump has drawn his line. Now the clock is running.

After publicly giving Iran roughly 10 days to 15 days to reach a nuclear agreement, Trump used his State of the Union address to make clear the deadline is backed by force. 

‘I will never allow the world’s number one sponsor of terror … to have a nuclear weapon,’ he told lawmakers Tuesday night.

The president first outlined the short timeline Feb. 19, saying the world would know within ‘probably 10 days’ whether Tehran was prepared to strike what he called a meaningful deal. 

‘I would think that would be enough time — 10, 15 days, pretty much maximum,’ Trump said, warning that absent an agreement, ‘it’s going to be unfortunate for them.’

On Tuesday, he reinforced the pressure from the House chamber, telling Congress negotiations are underway, but Iran has not met his core condition. 

‘We are in negotiations with them,’ Trump said. ‘They want to make a deal, but we haven’t heard those secret words: ‘We will never have a nuclear weapon.”

He also pointed back to the 2025 U.S. strike on Iranian nuclear infrastructure, describing Operation Midnight Hammer as having ‘obliterated Iran’s nuclear weapons program.’ 

After that operation, he said, Tehran was warned ‘to make no future attempts to rebuild its weapons program,’ adding that Iran is now ‘starting it all over again.’

The combination of a defined diplomatic window and a public reminder of U.S. military action marks a sharper phase in the standoff, as talks in Geneva unfold under mounting pressure.

Trump has not detailed what specific action would follow if Iran refuses his terms. But he told reporters in mid-February that if a meaningful agreement does not materialize, ‘bad things will happen,’ and acknowledged he is considering further steps.

With the State of the Union complete and the president’s timeline already in motion, the coming days are likely to determine whether the administration secures a nuclear concession — or shifts toward a more confrontational path in the Middle East.

The diplomatic ultimatum is underscored by the largest assembly of U.S. naval power in the Middle East since the 2003 invasion of Iraq. 

The world’s most advanced aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, arrived at Souda Bay, Crete, Monday. The Ford joined the USS Abraham Lincoln, which has been conducting 24-hour flight operations in the Arabian Sea since late January.

Between the two strike groups, the U.S. now commands a fleet of 14 major warships, including nine Arleigh Burke-class destroyers armed with Tomahawk cruise missiles.

Meanwhile 12 U.S. F-22 Raptor stealth fighters touched down at Ovda Airbase in southern Israel. 

As national security analyst Joe Funderburke noted in the Small Wars Journal, ‘The F-22 is not a simple show-of-force aircraft. It is designed to suppress enemy air defenses and protect penetrating strike platforms like the B-2 Spirit bomber, the same combination used to devastate Iran’s deeply buried nuclear facilities at Fordow and Natanz nine months ago.’

The president’s reminder of Operation Midnight Hammer — which utilized B-2 bombers to drop 30,000-pound ‘bunker buster’ munitions — serves as the tactical blueprint for what follows the current deadline. 

While the 2025 operation was a ‘surgical’ surprise strike, the current buildup suggests a far broader mission set, potentially due to Iran’s threat of an aggressive response. 

Iran’s response to Operation Midnight Hammer was measured and the U.S. had warning. This time, Iran has vowed a more forceful response and says any U.S. troops operating in the Middle East could be open targets. 

Amid his sharper diplomatic timeline, Trump also asserted that Iranian authorities had killed some 32,000 protesters in weeks of demonstrations that began in early January — a number far above independent estimates and Tehran’s own death toll. 

‘Just over the last couple of months with the protests, they’ve killed at least, it looks like, 32,000 protesters — 32,000 protesters in their own country,’ the president said. ‘They shot them and hung them.’ 

Administration officials have signaled that any agreement would require Iran to halt all uranium enrichment and provide verifiable guarantees that its program cannot be reconstituted — terms Iran repeatedly has objected to.

Both Washington and Iran appear to believe the other is bluffing. 

Trump has framed the timeline as a final opportunity for diplomacy backed by overwhelming force. Iranian leaders, meanwhile, have publicly dismissed U.S. threats and warned that any strike would trigger retaliation against American forces and regional allies.

Still, U.S. negotiators will meet with Iranian envoys once again in Geneva Thursday.

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USA TODAY Sports has live coverage every day from the NFL combine in Indianapolis. Follow along here.

Football is a dynamic sport. You don’t have to be an expert to see how the game has changed in the last 15 years. Offenses and defenses have each had their advantages in different schemes over the last decade and a half.

As things have changed, a key position on defense has suffered: linebacker.

It’s become one of the least valued positions in the NFL. Only four linebackers currently have an average annual value (AAV) on their contracts above $15 million, per OverTheCap. That’s the fewest of any position on defense and compares to 23 edge rushers and 21 cornerbacks which surpass that threshold.

It’s harder to project future success at the position than others when going from college to the professional level. Successful college linebackers may be too small or too slow to handle what they’ll be facing in the NFL.

It’s tough to find players that meet the criteria of being strong enough to take on or shed blocks, hard-hitting enough to reliably tackle and fast enough to handle running backs or tight ends in coverage.

Outside of the likes of perennial All-Pros Fred Warner and Roquan Smith, teams hav struggled to find reliable, consistent linebacker play, especially from younger players.

That could change dramatically in 2026.

Linebacker is one of the best positions in the 2026 NFL Draft. The Ohio State duo of Arvell Reese and Sonny Styles are locks for the first round; Georgia’s CJ Allen isn’t far behind.

Reese and Styles are both elite athletes for the position with impressive size at 6-foot-4 and around 240 pounds. But they’re not solely relying on their physical tools.

‘What pick I go, I do believe I can make a difference,’ Styles said. ‘Whatever club I get to, figure out what my role is and be a champion at that role.’

That mix of size and athleticism sets both of the former Buckeyes up for success. Linebackers need more than that and both have shown their pre- and post-snap recognition in 2025.

‘I want to show [teams] I’m an intelligent football player,’ Styles added. ‘I’m not just a guy just out there running and hitting. That’s part of the game too but you have to be a smart football player especially in the NFL.’

‘Teams have pretty much been asking me what I want to do and see where my mind was at. I’ve been telling them I think I’m an outside linebacker, edge, potentially,’ Reese said. ‘I think I got a lot to get better at linebacker and edge, as far as pass rushing and coverage. But I think I can adapt to it, quick.’

One buzzword stands out with this incoming linebacker class: versatility.

Cincinnati product Jake Golday is similar sized to Styles and Reese with impressive athleticism for his frame as well. His experience at defensive end before settling in at linebacker for the Bearcats gives him confidence he can fit in any scheme at the NFL level.

‘I’ll do whatever is asked of me,’ he said. ‘One of the abilities that I have is that I’m really versatile.’

LSU linebacker Harold Perkins Jr. burst on the college football scene as a freshman with 7.5 sacks, four forced fumbles and an interception in 2022. Injuries affected his 2024 season and that plus his smaller frame could see him selected in the later rounds. But he’s shown a varied skillset that could fit teams’ evolving demands.

‘Just talking with teams and they ask me how I see myself and I give them all the same answer: I’m versatile,’ Perkins said. ‘Depending on the opponent we’re playing, who they’ve got over there and what you want me to do. If you need me at linebacker or if you need me at the edge or at that big nickel spot, I can do it.’

Reese, Styles, Allen and Golday are all likely to be the first linebackers drafted in the class with the mix of size and athleticism to handle NFL demands.

After that comes a group including Perkins and Alabama’s Deontae Lawson who both can handle the speed of the NFL game but have size questions at over 6-foot but under 230 pounds.

Lawson’s candid about how he should improve to stick at the NFL level.

‘Block deconstruction because at the next level you have elite offensive linemen that know their best way of getting the block so you can’t just slip and avoid everyone,’ he said.

He’s not worried about holding up in coverage, though.

‘I can run sideline-to-sideline and I think my instincts are pretty high,’ Lawson said. ‘I have great play recognition and I think that goes back to my film studying.’

Starting in Indianapolis at the NFL scouting combine this week, this linebacker class will make the case to be the best in years. They’ll have two months to emphatically convince franchises that’s true ahead before the NFL draft in April.

NFL combine: How to watch LBs

  • Day: Thursday, Feb. 26
  • Time: 3 p.m. ET
  • Location: Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis
  • TV: NFL Network
  • Streaming: NFL+, fubo
  • Drills:
    • Pass drop and hip rotation
    • Pass rush drill
    • Four-bag shuffle drills
  • Tests:
    • 40-yard dash
    • Vertical jump
    • Broad jump
    • 3-cone drill
    • 20-yard shuttle
    • Bench press

Catch all of the NFL combine drills with a Fubo subscription

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Olympian Hilary Knight responded to President Donald Trump’s viral call with the U.S. men’s hockey team on ESPN on Wednesday.

‘I thought it was sort of a distasteful joke, and unfortunately, that is overshadowing a lot of the success, the success of just women at the Olympics carrying for Team USA and having amazing gold medal feats,’ Knight said on ‘SportsCenter.’

‘We’re just focusing on celebrating the women in our room, the extraordinary efforts, and continue to celebrate three gold medals in program history as well as the double gold for both men’s and women’s at the same time. And really not detract from that with a distasteful joke.’

During a locker room call with the men’s team, President Donald J. Trump invited the players to the State of the Union address. He briefly mentioned the women’s hockey team, which also won gold during the Olympics, saying he had to invite them too, or he would be ‘impeached.’ The men’s hockey team laughed at the president’s remark, which Knight addressed in her conversation with ESPN.

‘I think there’s a genuine level of support there and respect (between the men’s and women’s teams), and I think that’s being overshadowed by sort of a quick lapse,’ Knight said.

‘The guys were in a tough spot, so it’s a shame that sort of this storyline and narrative has kind of blown up and overshadowing kind of that connection and genuine interest in one another and cheering one another on.’

President Trump’s now viral call generated varying reactions and backlash, including rapper Flavor Flav extending an invitation to the women’s team for an alternative celebration. Team USA’s women declined the President’s invitation, citing timing and previous commitments. On Tuesday, President Trump said they would ‘soon’ visit the White House.

Several members of the men’s team eventually addressed the chatter surrounding the call, including Olympian Jack Hughes and his brother, Quinn Hughes. ‘People are so negative about things. I think everyone in that locker room knows how much we support them, how proud we are of them, and we know the same way we feel about them, they feel about us,’ Jack Hughes said.

‘You know, we’re really happy for them,’ Quinn Hughes said. ‘Obviously, a lot going on social media right now surrounding our team and their team, but in the last couple of summers, we’ve done a lot of training with them and got to know a lot of those girls really well.’

Knight shared that the men’s and women’s teams have supported one another in the Olympic village and on the global and professional stages. She says she looks forward to the relationships continuing. Knight also revealed what she thinks the moment taught people.

‘I think this is just a really good learning point to really focus on how we talk about women, not only in sport but in industry,’ Knight said.

‘Women aren’t less than, and our achievements shouldn’t be overshadowed by anything else other than how great they are.’

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